This is a common topic of confusion for beginners in Idris.
The problem in this case in second conc
version:
conc : Vect n a -> Vect m a -> Vect (m+n) a
conc [] ys = ys
Idris cannot apply addition commutativity because Nat plus commutativity is a theorem from the compiler point of view. Here its type:
Idris> :t plusCommutative
plusCommutative : (left : Nat) -> (right : Nat) -> left + right = right + left
There're no general rules to tell you which theorem to choose and to apply. Of course, some heuristics can be made for some simple cases, like Nat commutativity. But this also can make difficult to understand some other cases.
The other thing you need to consider is definition of plus
:
Idris> :printdef plus
plus : Nat -> Nat -> Nat
plus 0 right = right
plus (S left) right = S (plus left right)
Function plus
defined in a such way that is does pattern matching on its first argument. Idris actually can perform this pattern matching in types. So in first version, where
conc : Vect n a -> Vect m a -> Vect (n+m) a
conc [] ys = ys
you have (0 + m) in type and Idris can replace plus 0 m
with m
and everything typechecks. plus m 0
would work if you define your +
operator by pattern matching on second argument. For example, this compiles:
infixl 4 +.
(+.) : Nat -> Nat -> Nat
n +. Z = n
n +. (S m) = S (n +. m)
conc : Vect n a -> Vect m a -> Vect (m +. n) a
conc [] ys = ys
conc (x :: xs) ys = x :: (conc xs ys)
But it's obvious that writing new operator for every case you need is horrible. So to make your second version compilable you should use rewrite ... in
syntax in Idris. You need next theorems:
Idris> :t plusZeroRightNeutral
plusZeroRightNeutral : (left : Nat) -> left + 0 = left
Idris> :t plusSuccRightSucc
plusSuccRightSucc : (left : Nat) -> (right : Nat) -> S (left + right) = left + S right
Idris> :t sym
sym : (left = right) -> right = left
And here is version which compiles:
conc : Vect n a -> Vect m a -> Vect (m + n) a
conc {m} [] ys = rewrite plusZeroRightNeutral m in ys
conc {n=S k} {m} (x :: xs) ys = rewrite (sym $ plusSuccRightSucc m k) in x :: (conc xs ys)
I'm not explaining here how rewriting
and theorem proving works here. This is a topic of another question if you don't understand something. But you can read about that in tutorial (or wait for The Book release :) .